Ok, so there are spheres within spheres that make up the cosmos beneath
the realm of God. There's a sphere that has the constellations on it,
a sphere for each of the planets, a sphere for each of the elements. That's
12 spheres (hey, just like the number of astrological signs, and the number
of tribes of Israel, and the number of apostles, and the hours in a day
and in a night, what a freaking coincidence!).
Now, there aren't "really" 12 spheres. The realm of sensate
matter is the lower four spheres, the Elemental spheres. This sphere includes
all the physical planets, stars, galaxies, universes, etc. that we can
and cannot see. Anything that can be sensed exists in the realm of the
the elements, below the sphere of the Moon. So the elemental spheres,
while separate and harmonious, blend together in to what we see. This
is the sphere that can be sensed through our material bodies.
This leaves us with nine spheres.
The uppermost sphere, that of the constellations, can be viewed as an
influencing sphere as opposed to a governing sphere. Agrippa talks a bit
about this, and I won't get too into details here, but suffice it to say
that in my understanding of the NP cosmology, the sphere of the constellations
is more like a barrier between the realms of the planetary governors (ending
at the horizon of Saturn's Sphere) and the unknowable Realm of God (Light-Divine
Darkness-the One). The constellations can be viewed as pinpricks in this
barrier through which the infinite light enters the realms of sensation,
guiding or feeding as it were, the planetary governors.
Now, what we've done here is divided the infinite universe into three
parts. The material realm is composed of the four elemental spheres. The
seven spheres of the planetary governors is the second part, ending at
the barrier of the Sphere of the constellations. Then there's the infinite
realm of God, the third part.
Only the realms of the Planetary Governors and the sphere of matter
can be known and interacted with consciously. The higher realms may be
experienced, but being before the utterance of the Word, they can't really
be put into words.
The realms of the Planetary Governors exist as pure emanations of God.
When viewing God they are passive, but when viewing the realm of Matter,
they are active. Being pure in their essence, they are in perfect harmony
with one another and with God.
Now I'd like to introduce a concept I've used on the blog before (and
I don't claim to have created it), the Sphere of the Magician. Every one
of us live in a bubble of perception. Lots of us have read various modern
and classical interpretations of existence as being only that which can
be sensed. Plato would have totally grokked Robert Anton Wilson, God rest
his heathen soul. (I doubt Wilson could grok Plato though.)
This bubble of perception is our sphere within the material realm. The
Emerald Tablet of Hermes, an excellent model of magickal operation on
its own, bears the famous inscription "that which is above is like
that which is below." Metaphysically speaking, we have a spiritual
sphere of sensation as well as the physical sphere of sensation. They
aren't really separated, but it's easier to think of them as parts than
to try to understand the whole all at once. A seed in an orange doesn't
look like an orange, and neither does the peel by itself, but they're
still one thing.
The basic intent of the magician is to get their "sphere"
into harmony with the other spheres. Neo-platonic philosophers had various
ways of achieving this. Plotinus taught that you could instantly "get
it" by realizing your race and value. He talks about denigrating
the things of matter and exalting the things of spirit. He, and Porphyry,
his student and biographer, believed that the way to reclaim your race
and value was through Philosophy, and various forms of Asceticism. Later,
some Gnostics and others would take the idea to the extreme. They believed
that because matter distracted you from your goal of reuniting with God,
then all matter must be inherently evil. Some went so far as to claim
that the God that created Matter must have been evil.
Poppycock.
Plotinus had another student that helped us out immensely as magicians
who would rather do something more active than philosophize all day, and
who wanted to participate in the matter-manifestation process in a more
hands-on way. This guy was Iamblichus. He taught that theurgy, magickal
arts and working with spirits were viable means of reuniting with the
One, God. That's the core of this system I'm presenting here. There are
various other branches of neo-Platonism, and lots to discuss and argue
about, but as magicians working with the NP magickal system, the point
is to harmonize our sphere with the spheres above, and through this harmony
to join with God, accomplishing what later became known as the Great Work.
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